Privacy Policy

Info.Resource, Inc. is committed to ensuring the privacy of users of our web sites. In
addition to fully supporting the Principles of Online Solicitation adopted by the
Interactive Services Association (ISA) and the Direct Marketing Association, Info.Resource
also pledges that:

Info.Resource will not provide an individual's e-mail address, usage paths, or
demographic data to any third parties.

Info.Resource will honor a request by a user to erase all information related to his or
her information maintained in the company's contact database.

Info.Resource uses a technology called non-persistent cookies, which is a small data
file that a server gives to your browser when you access a web site in order to let you
access the pages you request and to track the pages visited. Using non-persistent cookies
to track page visits helps us analyze our site usage more accurately.

Info.Resource is dedicated to improving Internet navigation for everyone, and firmly
believes that personal privacy is a commodity worth protecting. We are acutely aware that
evolving technologies present new challenges for user privacy. We work to comply with the
guidelines set by numerous privacy organizations to ensure that we stay on the cutting
edge of privacy protection.

Additional sites that we recommend you visit to keep abreast of the issues surrounding
your privacy and the Internet include:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is a non-profit civil liberties organization working
in the public interest to protect privacy, free expression, and access to public resources
and information online, as well as to promote responsibility in new media.

EPIC is a Washington, D.C. based public interest research center established in 1994 to
focus public attention on emerging civil liberties issues and to protect privacy, the
First Amendment, and constitutional values.

Privacy International (PI) is a London-based human rights group, established in 1990,
as a watchdog on surveillance by governments and corporations. PI has conducted campaigns
in Europe, Asia and North America to counter abuses of privacy by way of information
technology such as telephone tapping, ID card systems, video surveillance, data matching,
police information systems, and medical records.